Celebrate Spring with Backyard Farming

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This Spring, whether planning to grow food for the family or for sale at the local farmers market, here are some tips for building a farm in your own backyard from this informative series:

You can eat chicken’s meat and eggs, they help control the bugs in the garden, and their feathers can be used for pillow making.

Choose chickens. Chickens are multifunctional animals. You can eat their meat and eggs, they help control the bugs in the garden, and their feathers can be used for pillow making.

Preserve the harvest. You do not have to restrict yourself to just one method and you do not need to process your foods into just plain fruits and vegetables. For example, if you use tomatoes for sauce often, make sauce and then preserve that.

Make your garden grow. Make a plan and consider your garden’s development; site, size, and what the plot will be able to hold to maximize yield of vegetables and fruits.

The honeybee is an amazing feat of nature that is extremely well organized and that produces one of the healthiest foods in the world: honey.

Benefit from bees. The honeybee is an amazing feat of nature that is extremely well organized and that produces one of the healthiest foods in the world: honey. They are also important for pollinating our own food supply, so keeping them in your garden can be extremely beneficial.

Goats are available in a number of colors, sizes, and varieties, and can be used as dairy, meat and working animals.

Get a goat. Goats are available in a number of colors, sizes, and varieties, and can be used as dairy, meat and working animals. They can even be used as lawnmowers in places where mowing can be difficult.

Pick pigs. Pigs are great animals for food on the farm. Easy to keep, feed and raise, these animals produce abundant meat supplies with minimal effort.

For more tips on turning your homestead into a farm, pick up a copy of “Backyard Farming: Make Your Home a Homestead” by Kim Pezza.

Megan Whitworth
Megan Whitworth is the former creative director of Texas Forest Country Living. Growing up in East Texas, Megan discovered her love of writing at the age of 11, writing song lyrics and poetry, which turned into essays and articles for publications around East Texas. She later added photography into the mix capturing Friday night football games, the latest fashion looks, and portraits of people around the nation. Megan enjoys karaoke, blogging, reading, and road trips. She resides in Lufkin with her husband, Ryan, and two cats, Felix and Lucy.

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